http://www.humanevents.com/article.php?print=yes
<http://www.humanevents.com/article.php?print=yes&id=24610> &id=24610 
The Securities Bazaar: Destabilizing the U.S. Markets?
by Dr. Rachel Ehrenfeld and Alyssa A. Lappen 
Posted 01/23/2008 ET



All presidential candidates promise to fix our economy, but no one discusses
the need to better safeguard our financial markets. The Committee on Foreign
Investment in the U.S. (CFIUS), approved Bourse Dubai's purchase of 20% of
the America's largest electronic exchange, New York-based Nasdaq,  on Dec.
31, 2007. 
 
This may soon give Dubai access to the troubled Boston Stock Exchange (BSE),
through Nasdaq's proposed BSE acquisition, which is now pending before the
Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC).

"Foreign ownership of our capital markets may make it more difficult for
shareholders to obtain information about the inner workings of the stock
market," notes Brent Baker, a former SEC Special Counsel. Nasdaq, like most
U.S. exchanges, 5,100 brokerage houses and registered securities
representatives, is regulated by the Washington, D.C.-based Financial
Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA). The Philadelphia Stock Exchange
(PHLX), however, and the problematic BSE with its rather murky track record
of non-compliance, retained their independent self-regulatory organization
(SRO) status. Now, Nasdaq plans to purchase both.

"What do the regulators currently do to monitor the BSE, which up until now
had been sanctioned several times for failure to regulate itself?" Baker
wonders. Indeed, the SEC sanctioned the BSE in 1999 and 2007 for illegal
practices. The September 5, 2007 sanction was for the BSE failure to enforce
its own rules or comply with a 1999 SEC directive, and for illegal trading
activities - including forward trading, from 1999 through 2004.  On the same
day, the U.S. District Court for the District of Massachusetts ordered
former BSE President James Crofwell, to pay a $75,000 penalty "for aiding
and abetting the Exchange's failure to enforce its rules."

The BSE history raises especially thorny questions about market manipulation
and the possibility that unsupervised foreigner investors and securities
firms may borrow or manipulate U.S. company stocks, adversely affecting
domestic markets and further eroding investor confidence.

Since Bourse Dubai promotes its status as the world's first and leading
Islamic securities exchange, its influence could affect the listings on
Nasdaq. Dubai might leverage the "sovereign immunity" of both the BSE and
PHLX to list and delist companies on Nasdaq. SEC rules in that case could be
irrelevant, and the effects on the U.S. capital  markets and economy could
be enormous. For example, pharmaceutical companies producing Viagra and
contraceptives could be delisted, as could companies based in or doing
business with Israel.

"This is a slippery slope," says Baker, "if the SEC approves the Nasdaq's
purchase of the BSE and PHLX, and they both keep their SRO licenses."

American regulators "believe in honest and complete disclosure and people
invest with the understanding that they will make or loose money depending
on their judgment, the markets and the economy," says John W. Moscow, former
Assistant District Attorney and Deputy Chief of Investigations under New
York District Attorney Robert Morgenthau.

"In England," where Dubai will shortly acquire Nasdaq's 28% stake in the
London Stock Exchange, he says, "the governing philosophy is that if God did
not want [investors] shorn, he would not have made them sheep." 

The integrity of regulations in Dubai is a more important problem. To
attract business, "they are willing to omit the costs of regulation and
compliance that exist elsewhere." Dubai traders deal in arms, women, drugs,
and money laundering. "As long as [traders] deliver the money, and so long
as the market does what it is supposed to do, it is sufficient," says
Moscow.

The U.S. markets are already in big trouble, says Moscow, given the high
trading volume between U.S. and foreign exchanges through shadow accounts to
the Federal Reserve Board's Depository Trust Corporation (DTC), Euroclear
and other clearing systems. Nasdaq's acquisition of the BSE only worsens the
problem.

The same owner, through many different foreign corporate entities, can buy
majority stakes in many companies and manipulate the market. With no
regulation of these trades, no one would be the wiser. "The bad guys are
going to eat us alive," Moscow says.

Indeed, SEC chairman Christopher Cox has now proposed allowing foreign
exchanges to sell directly to U.S. investors through U.S.-based brokerage
firms. Exchanges with "comparable" regulatory oversight would no longer need
to register with the SEC, under the new proposal. But of course, having
comparable regulations alone in no way ensures that foreign exchanges
enforce their regulations with the same rigor as the SEC.

The U.S. markets remain the most highly and efficiently regulated in the
world, according to Moscow. Clearly, that is still not good enough.


Dr. Rachel Ehrenfeld, author of Funding Evil; How Terrorism is Financed and
How to Stop It, is director of American Center for Democracy and member of
the Committee on the Present Danger. Alyssa A. Lappen, Senior Fellow at the
ACD, a former editor for Forbes, Corporate Finance, Working Woman and
Institutional Investor.

Copyright C 2008 HUMAN EVENTS. All Rights Reserved.



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